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Sept. 20—A famous
Shanghai lawyer,
Zheng Enchong
told
NTD that he blew the whistle on
Han Zheng on Sept. 19
by reporting him to the
Discipline Inspection
Commission
in Shanghai, after a battle of wits.
Han Zheng is the current head of the
Communist Party
China Shanghai Municipal Committee.
On his way to the Inspection Commission, two police officers
closely monitored Zheng Enchong and the inspection team
refused to accept his whistle-blowing materials at first;
so how did Zheng Enchong succeed?—Here’s the coverage.
Zheng Enchong says that in July, when the inspection team
had just arrived in Shanghai, his friend lawyers, democratic
parties and federations all rang him, encouraging him
to write an appeal letter to the Inspection Commission.
His friends said they could help him deliver the letter
and gave details that would boost the chances of the team
paying attention to his appeal; also suggesting that Zheng
personally go to the office to prove the letter’s authenticity.
So on Sept. 19, Zheng Enchong visited the inspection office
located at 888
Jiangsu Road,
Changning, Shanghai.
Zheng’s home was being monitored by twelve policemen
and was under
24-hour watch, so in order to go out, he said
he needed to go to a police station for his parents,
to help with formalities to change their registered address.
When Zheng got close to the inspection office, he told
the two police officers following him that he wanted to
hand over one appeal letter to the central inspection team.
Lawyer, Zheng Enchong: "
The police asked me,
who do you want to blow the whistle on?"
"I said, 'Han Zheng'; he said, 'Come on, don't tell me that,
I'll pretend not to know'—so I told him to ring his boss."
"I said, 'from the
point of view of protecting yourself,
you should consult your boss and find out if I am allowed
to visit the inspection team.'"
"I prepared myself mentally and continued, 'After notifying
your boss at the
National Security Office, you'd better
stop me and force me into the police car—I'm prepared;
the story may make today's breaking news."
The National Security Department didn't want such news
of officers stopping a Shanghai resident from appealing.
Zheng Enchong says, the boss instructed the police to
"ignore it, since he’s already arrived there."
So Zheng Enchong sued Han Zheng, a Politburo member
and the head of the Shanghai Municipal Committee.
Since his jail release on
June 5, 2003, Zheng Enchong's been
under house arrest from Han Zheng for over 8 years.
Zheng says when he entered the office to submit the letter,
an officer with the role number 018 met with him, who was
over 60 years old and experienced in handling petitioners,
but he was shocked at seeing the target being Han Zheng.
Zheng Enchong: "His eyes faced me ferociously and he said,
'You're suing Han Zheng?—Do you have evidence?’"
"I said, 'yes I have', and he told me I had to be responsible
for my charge, so I said, 'I am certainly responsible.'"
"He continued, 'What sort of evidence do you have?'
—so I replied, 'if I had no evidence, I wouldn't come.'"
The officer said that he would first review it,
then accept the charge.
Zheng Enchong: "I said, 'what you need to review?
—the official newspapers' first-page headlines and over
a hundred pages have all said the inspection teams are here
to receive charges and appeals, and will investigate issues
related to the main leaders in Shanghai; well Han Zheng is
the top man, and what I am doing today is correct."
Zheng Enchong says the officer was still looking for an excuse
to refuse his appeal.
Zheng Enchong: "He was surprised—I said, 'I delivered this
appeal via the
National People's Congress representatives,
who are members of democratic parties and lawyers
and they helped me'; he then began to pay attention."
"I submitted a large number of whistle-blowing materials
on Han Zheng and other main Shanghai officials, directly
to the
Central Discipline and Inspection Commission."
The officer let his two assistants take Zheng Enchong's
two-page appeal letter, who then numbered and scanned it.
As Zheng Enchong returned home at 10 o'clock that night,
a police car arrived, and Shi Jinrong and
Zhang Xiaoming
from the
Zhabei District Public Security Bureau got out
to tell him that from now on, he was banned from going out,
because he had lied to the monitoring officers today
and had visited the inspection team without approval.
Zheng Enchong asked, "
If I would have told you, would you
have let me go?"—to which they said, "certainly not."
On Aug. 11, police had raided Zheng Enchong's home after
he disclosed in an interview with foreign media a day earlier
that he would write an appeal letter to the inspection team.
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- published: 23 Sep 2014
- views: 52